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Issue 1071 coverPSYCHOBIOLOGY OF POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER A Decade of Progress Volume 1071 published July 2006
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1071: 324–334 (2006). doi: 10.1196/annals.1364.025
Copyright © 2006 by the New York Academy of Sciences
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Articles by SIEGMUND, A.
Articles by WOTJAK, C. T.

Toward an Animal Model of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

ANJA SIEGMUNDa AND CARSTEN T. WOTJAKa

a Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, D-80804 Munich, Germany

Key Words: fear • anxiety • conditioning • memory • stress • sensitization • incubation • generalization • habituation • extinction

Address for correspondence: Anja Siegmund, Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Neuronal Plasticity Group, Kraepelinstr. 2, D-80804 Munich, Germany. Voice: +49-89-30622-630; fax: +49-89-30622-610.  e-mail: siegmund{at}mpipsykl.mpg.de

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) belongs to the most frequent anxiety disorders. Despite a broad body of evidence concerning neurobiological correlates of this illness, the pathomechanisms of PTSD are still poorly understood. This illustrates the need to establish animal models of this disorder. Recently, PTSD model has become a somewhat fashionable term used in animal studies for almost every stress-induced behavioral alteration. Only few cases, however, reflect the human disorder closely enough to deserve this term. Systematic research requires valid animal modeling with clearly defined criteria. This article outlines and discusses criteria for prospective PTSD models, based on a theoretical framework that emphasizes the involvement of both associative and nonassociative memory processes in the development and maintenance of PTSD.






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